how do I write about the beauty of the world when barefoot people pass before my window in search of shelter
how do I share my pleasure of the birds' sweet song at dawn when I see faces etched with panic from deafening blasts of bombs
how to rejoice in love and friendship when meeting people who could barely save their lives after burying their loved ones
how can I write with passion of the kindness of the human heart when I see thousands fleeing from the ruins of their homes only to face police walls barbed wire
true words are hard to find as said a poet of an older war
when it is a lie to speak a lie to keep silent
not easy
The poet from which my last two lines come: John Balaban, Vietnam veteran: “A poet had better keep his mouth shut,” he writes in “Saying Good-by to Mr. and Mrs. My, Saigon, 1972”: unless he’s found words to comfort and teach. Today, comfort and teaching themselves deceive and it takes cruelty to make any friends when it is a lie to speak, a lie to keep silent.